New tech allows parents to ‘score’ IVF embryos for desirable traits — and it’s in desperate need of regulation
Companies now offer polygenic embryo selection to prospective parents undergoing IVF. But the technology is dangerously underregulated.
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Companies now offer polygenic embryo selection to prospective parents undergoing IVF. But the technology is dangerously underregulated.
The 2024 Starliner mission, which left astronauts Butch Wilmore and Suni Williams stranded in space for nine months, has received NASA’s worst mishap classification in
The four astronauts heading to the moon for the lunar fly-by are the first humans to venture there since 1972. The ten-day mission will travel
Archeologists found evidence that ancient Romans may have used a medical treatment involving perfume… and human feces.
NPR’s science podcast Short Wave talk about how ultrarunning affects the body, the trend of intermittent fasting and how to protect people’s mental health when
A study in mice and people with osteoarthritis suggests semaglutide can bulk up cartilage between bones, though bigger trials are needed to confirm.
A new study suggests that ancient microbes once cast as oxygen haters may have actually learned to use the gas, offering a clue to how
In an early animal test, a new nasal-spray vaccine has shown promise against a variety of germs and a common allergen, scientists report.
Voices contain countless cues about their owners, and new research suggests that computers might use them to facilitate a range of bad behaviors.
NASA astronaut Christina Koch and Canadian Space Agency astronaut Jeremy Hansen take off on a T-38 training flight from Ellington Field on Feb. 11, 2026
In October 2008, Chris Bretherton lifted off from the coast of northern Chile in a C-130 turboprop plane. It was too dark to see the
NASA is targeting March 6 as the earliest possible launch date for the Artemis II mission to the moon following a successful ‘wet dress rehearsal’
Dendrochronological analysis of a mysterious log coffin that tumbled from a cliff a century ago reveals clues to life in Roman-era Poland.
AI could soon spew out hundreds of mathematical proofs that look “right” but contain hidden flaws, or proofs so complex we can’t verify them. How